Easy Persimmon Pudding Recipe Joy of Cooking

Persimmon Pudding

Persimmon Pudding, from tree to table.

Step One:  Find a neighbor with a gorgeous, almost cartoon like persimmon tree.  Ask your Mom to help you pick persimmons… Mom always likes to help.

Step Two:  Entice neighbor and Mamabear with the promise of fresh baked persimmon pudding if you're granted access to their persimmon tree.

Step Three:  Try this phrase, "Hey Neighbor!  I think you're just swell.  Can I borrow a ladder?  That's one tall tree.  Sweet… thanks."

Persimmon Pudding

Step Four:  If you decide to sneak a peek into the other neighbor's yard while you're up on that ladder picking persimmons… maybe you'll want to be more subtle than my mother.  I'm just sayin…

Persimmon Pudding

Step Five:  Pick the ripest, softest persimmons.  Way to be, Mom!

Persimmon Pudding

Step Six:  Carefully place super ripe persimmons in bag to cart off home, thanking your neighbors Dan and Libby for their ladder and their abundant tree.

Persimmon Pudding

Step Seven:  If you don't happen to have a neighbor with a persimmon tree, I'm betting that the local farmer's market will have some gorgeous Hachiya persimmons for you this time of year…. and you won't need a ladder.

Step Eight:  Call your favorite Aunt from Indiana and ask her to promptly send you all of the persimmon recipes she owns… that will be a lot.  Seriously.  Thanks Judy!

Persimmon Pudding

Persimmon Pudding

Let's very quickly clear up any confusion you might have about persimmons.  There are probably two types of persimmons that you might run in your search for the fruit this autumn.  Fuyu persimmons are the squat little darlings that you can eat when they are hard.  Hachiya persimmons are the more bulbous fruit that are best enjoyed super right and super soft.  Hachiya persimmons are lovely for baking as they are super sweet… like eating nectar… dreamy.

Persimmon Pudding

Now… let's talk about 'Simmon Puddin'.  When you think of Persimmon Pudding think of sweet and super moist bread pudding meets spice cake.  If you can… close your eyes and think about a dessert that you grandmother might make in October 1976 if you lived in Indiana… now, you might not like this dessert as much as you like your grandmother's chocolate cake, but you liked that she served her Persimmon Pudding with super melty vanilla ice cream… which made everything ok.   There you go…. that's Persimmon Pudding.

Persimmon Pudding

some old school Indiana newspaper 1976

makes 6 to 8 servings

Print this Recipe!

2 cups fresh Hachiya persimmon pulp, removed from the skin

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 cup sugar

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

pinch of salt

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

2 cups milk

1 egg

1 tablespoon melted butter, plus more for buttering dish

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.  Butter a 9×9 baking dish and set aside

Stir the baking soda and sugar into the persimmon pulp and set aside.  This mixture may thicken as it sits… that's ok!

Sift together flour, baking powder, salt and spices.  Add to the persimmon mixture all at once and stir until flour is almost completely incorporated.

Whisk together milk, egg and butter and add to the persimmon and flour mixture.  Batter will be very loose.  Pour into the baking dish.

Bake for 1 hour covered with foil, or uncovered.  If you make the pudding covered, you'll have a very wet and moist pudding.  If you bake the pudding uncovered, you'll have a drier pudding topped with a bread like crust.  I baked my pudding uncovered.  Bake the pudding until it is firm but still very moist.

Allow to sit at room temperature for 30 minutes before serving.  Best served warm with vanilla ice cream.

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Source: https://joythebaker.com/2009/10/persimmon-pudding/

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